A printer may use an ink cartridge to print. An ink cartridge may have an embedded sensor to determine ink supply levels. The ink cartridge may be disposable and replaceable, along with the embedded sensor, when the ink cartridge is empty.
In examples described herein, a sensor assembly for a printer may include a sensor to detect ink supply levels, e.g., including a pressure sensor in an ink channel of the printer. Accordingly, an ink cartridge does not need to include an embedded sensor, thereby reducing a cost of the ink cartridge. In an example, a printer may include a sensor for each of multiple ink supplies (or other printing fluids). Accordingly, costs over the life of the printer will be reduced significantly, due to cost reduction of each consumable ink cartridge by omitting an embedded sensor to determine ink levels. Removing the sensor from the ink cartridge, and including it in the printer, may save considerable costs and reduce a carbon footprint for printer usage, throughout the use of hundreds of ink cartridges during a printer's service life.
The sensor 120 may be used to precisely identify an amount of ink remaining in the ink cartridges (e.g., an ink level 104), including when reaching an out-of-ink condition. The sensor 120 may communicate the out-of-ink condition to a printer controller/processor, allowing the printer controller to provide a notification and/or halt the printer when one or more of the ink cartridges reaches out-of-ink status (e.g., to avoid damage to the print head). The sensor 120 may be an affordable type of sensor, similar to embeddable sensors of other ink cartridges, resulting in cost advantages compared to more expensive external-specific sensors. The sensor 120 may identify the ink pressure 122 associated with the ink channel 130.
The sensor assembly 110, including the sensor 120, may be sealed to the ink channel 130. In an example, a housing for the sensor assembly (e.g., a pressure box) may include a groove to receive an O-ring to provide the seal between the sensor assembly 110 and the ink channel 130. In alternate examples, the sensor assembly 110 may be sealed to the ink channel 130 using other seals, such as glue, epoxy, welding, pressure-fit, and so on. The ink channel 130 may be removable, to allow interchangeability of the ink channel 130 and/or the sensor assembly 110 and its various components. The relative positions and sizes of the illustrated components are not shown to scale, and the sensor 120 and sensor assembly 110 may be positioned near the ink supply 102, to reduce potential pressure losses between the ink supply 102 and the sensor 120 along the ink channel 130. The ink channel 103 is coupleable to the ink supply 102 based on a fluid seal. In an example, the ink channel 130 may include a needle to penetrate the ink supply 102 and enable inflow of ink to the sensor 120 via the ink channel 130.
The sensor assembly 110 also may identify an air pressure 112, such as a static air pressure associated with the sensor assembly 110. In an example, the sensor assembly 110 may include a sealed pressure box to expose a portion of the sensor 120 to the air pressure 112, thereby enabling the sensor 120 to identify both the ink pressure 122 and the air pressure 112. In an alternate example, system 100 may include an air channel to communicate the air pressure 112 to the sensor assembly 110.
System 100 may determine the ink level 104 according to a difference in pressure between the air pressure 112 and the ink pressure 122. For example, the system 100 may determine that the ink level 104 is full, based on the ink pressure 122 being approximately equal to the air pressure 112. As ink is consumed, the ink level 104 drops, reducing the ink pressure 122 and causing a pressure differential between the ink pressure 122 and the air pressure 112. When the ink supply 102 is empty due to a low ink level 104, the differential between the ink pressure 122 and the air pressure 112 will be greatest. In an example, the pressure differential between the ink pressure 122 and the air pressure 112 may correspond to an ink level 104 according to a linear phase and an exponential phase. Initially, in the linear phase, the pressure differential may begin at approximately zero, corresponding to a full ink supply 102 where air pressure 112 is approximately equal to ink pressure 122. As ink is consumed during the linear phase, the pressure differential may change linearly toward approximately 0.10 pounds per square inch (psi), corresponding to a loss of approximately 75% of the ink supply 102, resulting in reduction of the ink pressure 122 associated with the remaining 25% of ink. As the ink level 104 continues to drop, the pressure differential may increase exponentially, from approximately 0.10 psi at 25% ink remaining, to 1.00 psi at 0% ink remaining (1.00 psi=empty). For example, when the ink level 104 reaches 12.5% ink remaining, the pressure differential may increase a further 0.10 psi along an exponential curve. Consumption of the final, remaining 12.5% of the ink supply may correspond to a further 0.80 change in the pressure differential, from 0.20 psi to 1.00 psi, along the exponential curve. Accordingly, the system 100 may determine that the ink supply 102 has been exhausted when the pressure differential has reached 1.00 psi. In alternate examples, the specific psi and ink supply percentage values may be varied according to particular features of the ink channel 130, sensor 120, sensor assembly 110, ink supply 102, and so on. Thus, the sensor 120 may be used to measure ink flow, and ink flow may be used to diagnose whether the sensor 120 is working properly.
The floater 236 is to connect the ink channel 230 and air channel 234 between the ink supply 202 and the printer. The floater 236 may mount the sensor assembly 210 and provide alignment between the sensor assembly 210 and the ink supply 202, ensuring a reliable connection between ink and printer. The floater 236 may enable a tolerance of movement between the ink supply 202 and the sensor assembly 210 (e.g., enable spring-loaded movement of the sensor assembly 210 relative to the ink supply 202).
The sensor assembly 210 may include a pressure box 240. The pressure box 240 is to interface with the ink channel 230 and the air channel 234. The pressure box 240 is to contain the sensor 220, enabling the sensor 220 to measure the pressure difference between the static air pressure associated with the air channel 234 (e.g., which is to pressurize the air inside the pressure box 240) and the ink pressure associated with the ink channel 230 (e.g., via through hole 232).
The sensor 220 may include a diaphragm 224 for identifying pressures. The diaphragm 224 may be exposed to air on one side of the diaphragm 224, and ink on the other side of the diaphragm 224. In an example, the sensor 220 may be exposed to the ink pressure via through hole 232 in fluid communication with the ink channel 230. The ink pressure may actuate the diaphragm 224. The sensor 220 also may be exposed to the air pressure of the air channel 234 based on exposure to an inside of the pressurized pressure box 240, to monitor the air pressure. Further, the sensor 220 may include contacts 252 to monitor for other conditions, such as conditions indicative of a broken bag in the ink supply 202.
The sensor assembly 210 may include various seals between components. For example, the pressure box 240 may include a removable cover and a first seal, to seal the cover to the pressure box 240 to pressurize the pressure box 240 and avoid air leakage. The pressure box 240 may be sealed to the ink channel 230 based on a second seal to isolate the ink of the ink channel 230 within the sensor 220 and prevent ink leakage (e.g., into the pressure box 240 and/or onto the printer). Seals may be provided based on various techniques. In an example, a seal may be provided as an O-ring. In alternate examples, a seal may be provided as ultrasound welding between components, epoxy gluing, chemical sealing, or other techniques to establish seals against leakage.
The ink channel 230 and the air channel 234 may be provided as two channels that are isolated from each other. The channels may be formed as extensions of the pressure box 240, such that channels are integrated with the pressure box 240 as a single unit, while maintaining fluid isolation from each other (i.e., to prevent air exposure to the portion of sensor 220 that is intended to determine ink pressure, and to prevent air from infiltrating the ink channel 230). The air channel 234 may be extended by, and/or formed as, a silicone tube or other suitable material to establish a connection with the floater 236 and/or the ink supply 202.
The sensor assembly 210 may include a cable 250. The cable 250 is shown as a flex cable in
The sensor 220 may be mounted to a base, such as a ceramic mount to which the sensor 220 is attached. The cable 250 may interface with the sensor 220 and/or the ceramic base, e.g., based on wire bonding. Wire bonding may be used to attach and/or support various components, to provide electrical communication between components. In an example, the contacts 252 and diaphragm 224 may interface with the cable 250 based on wire bonds.
The cable 250 may include a trace that is dedicated to contacts 252, arranged in the air channel 234 and used to detect a broken bag of ink supply 202. The contacts 252 may be arranged in the holes connecting an interior of the pressure box 240 with the air channel 234. The contacts 252 of the cable 250 may cross the air channel 234, e.g., along a diameter across a cross-section of the air channel 234. The contacts 252 thus may serve as a broken bag sensor. If the ink supply 202 is broken, ink may intrude into the air channel 234, arriving at the pressure box 240. The contacts 252 may detect the presence of an ink drop, identifying that there is a broken bag in the ink supply 202. Accordingly, printing may be halted (e.g., based on a printer controller/processor communicating with contacts 252) in response to the identification of the broken ink supply 202, avoiding damage to the printer.
The cable 250 may include a plurality of cables, and can support other components such as electromagnetic interference (EMI) suppressors, filters, or other digital components. Encapsulant, such as a plastic-like gel or sealant, may be used as a wire bond protective cover, to protect wire bonds between components and to mechanically support the wires and bonds (e.g., bond balls formed at the bond between wires and the components to which the wires are bonded). The encapsulant may help the sensor 220 endure against wear and/or corrosion, over years associated with the lifetime use of the printer.
The cable 250 (e.g., a flex cable) may interface with and/or include a connector, to connect electrical signals between the flex cable 250 and a printer. In an example, a connector may be used to couple an external braided wire cable from the printer to the flex cable 250, which in turn may communicate with associated components of the sensor assembly 210. The connector may be mounted to an external surface of the sensor assembly 210, to provide mechanical support and isolation to avoid damage to the flex cable. In an example, the connector may be mounted to a removable cover of the pressure box 240, such that the flex cable length provides slack to enable the cover to be opened and closed without disconnecting the flex cable 250.
In an example, the printer 300 may be a high-volume, 2-inch platform inkjet printer, to interface with an ink supply 302 including an ink bag and cartridge chassis having an acumen chip for communication external to the ink supply 302.
The sensor assembly 410 may be coupled to the floater 436 via the ink channel 430 and the air channel 434. In an example, the sensor assembly 410 may be coupled to the floater 436 based on a snap-together assembly. The ink supply 402 may be mated to the floater 436, to enable fluid communication between the ink supply 402 and the ink channel and/or air channel.
The cover 542 is to cover and seal the sensor 520 inside the pressure box of the sensor assembly 510. The cover 542 also may support connector 544 mounted to the external surface of the cover 542 (e.g., a connector 544 mounted to the end of the flex cable 550 extending from the sealed pressure box, for communicating with the sensor 520 and other components within the sensor assembly 510). The pressure box cover 542 is shown attached to the pressure box using fasteners 544, such as screws or other fasteners, or other techniques such as snap-together, gluing, welding, and the like. The cover 542 may use a seal, such as an O-ring or other technique, to ensure that the cover 542 is sealed to the pressure box to avoid leakage infiltrating between the pressure box and cover 542.
The pressure box 640 may extend across both the ink channel 630 and the air channel 634, enabling sensor 620 (and associated flex cable 650/contacts) to interact with the ink channel 630 and the air channel 634. For example, the sensor 620 may be sealed against a through-hole communicating with the ink channel 630, to identify ink pressure and prevent ink from flowing past the sensor 620 into the pressure box 640. The pressure box 640 may include features to accommodate a seal with the cover (not shown in
Referring to
Accordingly, examples provided herein may take measurements without a need to interrupt printing, taking pressure measurements as the opportunities arise during a high-volume print run. For example, when there is no ink flow in the ink color that is going to be measured (to avoid pressure loses along the needle), when the printer carriage is not accelerating from left to right or in the middle of a printing zone (to avoid inertial pressure effects on the sensor), and when the air pumps are not pressurizing (to avoid the influence of pressure noise).
Examples provided herein (e.g., methods) may be implemented in hardware, software, or a combination of both. Example systems (e.g., printers) can include a controller/processor and memory resources for executing instructions stored in a tangible non-transitory medium (e.g., volatile memory, non-volatile memory, and/or computer readable media). Non-transitory computer-readable medium can be tangible and have computer-readable instructions stored thereon that are executable by a processor to implement examples according to the present disclosure.
An example system can include and/or receive a tangible non-transitory computer-readable medium storing a set of computer-readable instructions (e.g., software). As used herein, the controller/processor can include one or a plurality of processors such as in a parallel processing system. The memory can include memory addressable by the processor for execution of computer readable instructions. The computer readable medium can include volatile and/or non-volatile memory such as a random access memory (“RAM”), magnetic memory such as a hard disk, floppy disk, and/or tape memory, a solid state drive (“SSD”), flash memory, phase change memory, and so on.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2014/014564 | 2/4/2014 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2015/119594 | 8/13/2015 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20170008297 A1 | Jan 2017 | US |